Winder weekly news. (Winder, Jackson County, Ga.) 18??-1909, May 14, 1908, Image 3

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W. E. YOUNG, The Shingle Man Dealer In Lumber, Lime, Shingles, Brick, Hardware, Cabinet Mantels , Doors, Sash, etc. Agent for the Celebrated Rubberette Roofing. Warehouse on Candid St. PROFESSIONAL CARDS .!. F, HOLMES, ATT* >KN EY-AT-LAW, Statham, Ga. Criminal and Commercial Law a Specialty. SPURGEON WILLIAMS DENTIST, Winder - - . Georgia (Cilices over Smith <fc Carithers hank. All work done satisfac torily, W. 11. QUARTER MAN ATTORNEY AT LAW Winder, Ga. Practice in all the courts Commercial law a specialty. W. L. DkLaPERRIERE DENTAL SURGERY. Winder - - Georgia Fillings, Bridge and Plate-work done in most scientific and satis factory way. Offices on Broad St. ALLEN’S ART STUDIO. All kinds of Photographs made by latest methods. All work done promptly. Office on Candler St., Winder, Ga. Winder Train Schedules 4rrival and Departure of Trains Eastern Time. Taking effect Sunday Jan. 5, OH. Eastern Time is 88 minutes fas ter than Sun Time. SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY. FAST WARD. No. 52, - - 10:03 a m No. 82, - - *2 :50 pm No 88, - - 10:85 p m Westward. No. 41, - - 5:20 a m No. 38, - - 3:50 pm No. 58, - - 7:43 pm Ab>ve schedules are shown as infor mation, and are not guaranteed.” Gainesville Midland Railway SOUTH BOUND No. 11 —Lv 8:00 a. in. No. 15 —Lv. 1 :15 p. m No. 15 —Lv. 10:35 am: Suikhr only. NORTH BOUND No. 12 —Vr. 12:00 p. m No. 1 I—Ar.1 —Ar. 4:40 p m. No. 10 —A.. 4:43 p m ; Sun.onlv. No. 12 "ill run to Winder iv gardi°3s of No. 15. Yard limits at Winder are ex tended “south" to Seaboard Air Line junction. All trains going through Winder yard must be under full control. ip miiuw SCRAPE SETTER, Invent ed and tested by him. Sets Scrapes PERFECTLY. For Sale By R. P. Williams and Smith Hardware Cos., Winder, Georgia. DIRECTORY Methodist Episcopal Church, Rev. A. \Y. Oniiliei, Pastor. Preaching every Sunday at 11:30 a. in. and 8 p, m. Sunday School 10:30 a. in., \Y. 11. Toole, Superintendent. Prayer Meeting every Wednesday evening at usual hour. Christian Church, Rev. J. 11. Wood Pastor. rr..chitig Ist 4th aiul sth Sundays at n l3O a. m. and .S p. in. Sunday School 10:30 a. m. Claud May lie, Superintendent. Prayer meeting every Thursday evening at usual hour. Baptist Church, Rev. R. D. DeeWeese, Pastor. Preacft every 2nd and 4th Sunday at 1 r :3c a. m. and Bp. in.. Sunday School 10:30a. 111. W. L. Blassingame, Superintendent. Prayer meeting every Wednesday even ing at usual hour. Presbyterian Church. Services on the Ist and 3d Sundays ar ri a. m. and at 8:30 p. 111. Rev. Fritz Rauschenburg, pastor. Sunday school every Sunday at 10:30 a. m. W. H. Quarterman, Superintrndent. Holiness Church. Preaching second Sunday at 11 a. 111. and 7:30 p. m. Rev. and Mrs. Graham, pastors. Sunday school every Sunday at 3:30 P- m - T. J. Morgan, Superin., tendent. Prayer meeting every’ Satur day and Sunday nights at 8 p. m. Fv erybody invited. Winder Lodse No. 333. F. & A. M. Meets ever 2d Friday night over Winder Banking Cos. H. C. Mayne, \V. M.; G. W. Woodruff, S. W.; L. S. Radford. J. W.; F\, \V. Bondurand, S. I).: A. P. Copeland, . D.; R. D. Moore, Secretary; I. J. Hall, Tyler. Russell Lodge No. 99. K. of P. F. W. Bondurant, C. C.; J. H. Turner V. C ; B. A.Julian, Prelate; F K Durst, k of R and Sand M of F; J FI Callahan, M of W; H E Milli Kin, M A; H P Stan ton, I G; E C McDonald, O G Winder Lodge No. 81,1. 0. 0. F. S T Maughon, N S; .1 FI Callahan, V G; N B I.ord R S; R E Griffeth, F' S; W J Smith, Treas Navajo Tribe No. 42, I. 0. R. M. Meets ever}' 2nd and 4th Monday nights R L Griffeth, Sachem; J C Pentecost Sr Sagamore; C H Cook, Jr Sagamore E A Starr, G of R; G E Daniel, K of\V Camp Joseph E. Johnson U. C. V Meets every 3rd Saturday evening at 8 p. m., sun time, in City Hall. IL. J. Cox, Commander; E. M Moulder, Secretary’. Joseph E. Johnston Chapter. The Joseph E. Johnston Chap ter of the Lnit°d Daughters of the Confederacy meets every Wednes day after the third Sunday >ll each month. City Directory. Mayor, .J. T. Strange; Couneil men, J. J. Wilson, J. B. Williams. G.W. McDonald, T. A. Robinson At Large A. A. Camp, H. 8. Segar?. Our Clubbing Offer Watson's Weekly .Jeffersonian and Winder Weekly News, one year, $1.50 Atlanta Georgian and Winder Week ly News, one year, $4.50 Atlanta Tri-Weekly Constitution and Winder Weekly News, one year, St .50 AtUtntu Sr mi. Weekly Journal and #• Winder Weekly News, one year, $1.25 Watson’s Magazine and Winder Weekly News, one year, i 2.00 G WITH THE U ■ KURFEES PAINTS (ru L*ao and Zinc products) a -a For inside and out, walls, floors, barns, porches, roofs, etc. A particular kind for each job, and each kind particularly good. :: :: :: :: :: :: BOLD BY Woodruff Hdw. & Manufacturing Cos, WINDER, GEORGIA.j in Memory. On Wednesday evening the Bth of April the death Angel visited our home and took from us our dearly beloved father and husband, .John W . Graham. He was born Novem ber 18, 1853, died April 8, 1008. He had been in feeble health for some time, and on the Kith of March he was taken ill never to he restored to health again on earth. He was a patient sufferer, during his long illness, and all that loving hands could do was done. But still he could get no relief, 'till on Wed nesday evening at 9 o’clock death came as a sweet relief. Oh! it is so hard to know that we can never hear his sweet voice nor the coming of his footsteps any more. Neither can we look in his sweet face and see the kindness beaming in his once bright eyes. Nor can we feel the tender touch of his h.ands that cared for us in our infancy. No one knows, except those who have loved ones gone on before, how hard it is to part with those who are so precious to our hearts. He has crossed over the dark river of death, where sickness and sorrow is unknown, and joined our dear little brother and sister who have gone on before. Dear papa, you have gone from us and cannot enter our home again. Your absence makes our home sad and lonely. But if we put our trust in an all wise Father, who doeth all tilings well, we can join you in a brighter home and he a happy reunited family with God, where absence is unknown. Nannie Graham. No matter how fat a woman is she thinks it will be different when the fashion charge. The World s Best Climate is not entirely free from disease, on the high elevations fevers pre vail, while on the lower levels malaria is encountered to greater or less extent, according to the altitude. To overcome climate affections lassitude, malaria, jaundice, biliousness, fever and ague, and general debility, the moat effective remedy is Electric Bitters, the great alterative and blood purifier; the antidote for every form of bodily weakness, nervousness and insomnia. Sold under guarantee at G. W. De- Laperriere’s drug store. Price 50c. A woman’s idea of your being cross Is when you think some other woman is pretty’. • HIDDEN DANGERS. Nature Gives Timely Warnings That No Winder Citizen Can Afford to Ignore. DANGER SIGNAL NO. 1 comes from the kidney secretions. They will warn you when the kidneys are sick. Well kidneys excrete a clear, amber fluid. Sick kidneys send out a thin, pale and foamy, or a thick, red, ill-smelling urine, full of sediment and irregular of pag. sage. DANGER SIGNAL NO. 2 eome-’ from the hack. Back pains, dull and heavy, or sharp and acute, tell you of sick kidneys and warn you of the approach of dropsy, diabetes and Bright’s disease. Doan's Kid ney Bills cure sick kidneys and euro them permanently. Here’s Winder proof: C. T. Hamilton, Athens SL,Win der, Ga. says: “The too frequent action of my kidney secretions caused me much annoyance. I sometimes had to get up as many as four or five times at night and as a consequence my rest was greatly broken. I also had considerable backache. Being advised to try Doan’s Kidney Bills, I bought a box at Turners Bharmaoy and began taking them. I noticed an im- provement in mv condition after I had taken the first box and by the time I had used the contents of two I was well enough to discontinue the use of the remedy. lam now in the best of health and I am pleased to endorse Doan’t Kidney Bills.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Mil burn Cos., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan’s —and take no other Saving money is very useful for the man who is going to get away from you. A Californian’s Luck. “The luckiest day of my life was when I bought a box of Bucklen’s Arnica Salve,” writes Charles F. Bndahn. of Tracy, California. “Two 25c. boxes cured me of an annoying case of itching piles, which iiad troubled me for years and that yielded to no other treatment.” Sold under guarantee at G. W DeLaperriere’s drug store. When anybody agrees with you he has opinions; when he doesn’t., delusions. Letter to Maddox Brothers. Winder, Ga. Dear Sirs: The wear of paint goes by gollons; the less-gallons paint wears longest. The reason, of course, is its strength. It takes less callous, because it is strong; it wears a long time, because it is strong. It is all-paint and the strongest paint. There is a best paint among all painl paints. No two are alike, of course; no two cover alike or wear alike. One is thin, another is {thick; one has too much lead, another too much zinc, another is right. The right is Devoe.so far as is yet known. Perhaps somebody-clse will find-out a better paint than Devoe; then Devoe will become a more-gallons paint, a costlier paint, a weaker paint, a less-durable paint a less economical paint, a timid paint. Bigger changes than that have come over the world. Devoe has the lead; why shouldn't we lose it t° somehody-else? Yours truly 54 FW Devoe <fc Cos P* S. Smith Hardware Cos., sells our paint. | |To a good woman a lover’s jeal ousy is a just homage, but to a good wife a husdand's jealousy is an in sult. PERRY-RAINEY INSTITUTE. Commencement Sermon Sunday, May 17, By Rev. J. I. Oxford. The commencement exercises of Berry-Rainey Institute will begin Saturday, May 16. The following program has lx*en arranged: Saturday, May 16, debate between ; the Literary Societies. Question , for discussion: ‘ ’ Resolve*!, That the 1 women should he allowed to vote ji n every election held in the United States.” Affirmative: Louie Blakej r , Prea ton ( am. Negative: Joe Chesser, Ernest Pool. Sunday May 17, ll :30 o’clock a. in., annual sermon by Rev. J. I. Oxford, of Atlanta. Monday May IS, 8:(X)o\lck p. m., entertainment by the students. Tuesday May 19, 8:00 o’clock p. m., annual Literary address by Col. Cliff Walker, of Monroe, Ga- Music will bo furnished by the Auburn brass band. Next term will begin September 7, B.OS. They Know It On The Other Side. The people on the other side of tlit* sea know that Georgia has passed a prohibition law. A few days ago Mr. J. L. Mayson, city attorney for Atlanta, received a cablegram from somewhere in England, asking him if the enactment of the prohibition law in Georgia had reduced crime. Mr. Mayson, being an ardent prohi bitionist, and thoroughly posted on the good effects of the law stmt hack the right kind of an answer. The Licensing Bill now pending in the parliament of England makes this question of prohibition a very lively one among our English cousins at this time. May the good cause have triumph there. CEDAR CREEK. Mr. J. J. Hutchins and family attended Memorial services Sunday at Appalachee and reporta splendid time. Mr. 1). W. Wofford and family attended the singing at Cedar Creek church Sunday. Mr. Lee Helton says that he has planted his cotton twice and hasn’t yet got a stand. The third tip is out. Most of the farmers around here are planting th< ir cotton over again as it seems that the most of it is dying. Lillie May and Alberta Wood vis ited their brother, Mr. Jessie Wood, near County Line, recently. Mr. Delas Maffett and little son, Harold, of Atlanta, visited the for mer’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. I). W. Maffett, Sunday. If Big Hoke would go into the real estate business next year, lie might make a living renting J. M. Brown’s property, while Little Joe is attending to the affairs of state. K. R. It. Pointed With Scripture. A bachelor rector of a Western church was alone in his study when his housekeeper brought him the card of one of his parishioners, a spinster of means and charm. When the lady was seated on the opposite side of his study table the rector looked at her inquiringly, ex pecting to hear something concern ing parish work, in which she was active. To his surprise, an em barrassed silence ensued, during w hich he vainly sought for some thing to say. “Doctor Blank,” begun the lady, at last, in faltering tones, “do you tiiink —can you fancy conditions under which a —a woman is--justi fied in proposing?” “Why, yes,” said the rector, af ter some deliberation. “Thou art the man!” said the lady, resolutely, blie was right.